description:
March 18, 1957 THE SKYSCRAPER Page Three Lilac'Tinted Review Appears Today In Lounge The Review, campus literary mag azine off press today, brings a breath of spring with its lilac-tinted cover. The Editorial provokes definition of the term Seriousness, as applied to students, and an essay by Suzanne McBride describes the conquest of stage fright. Homeweary, a poem by Diane Sherwood, moves from Venice to London, to Rome, and to Switzer land ; and Sphinx of the Moors, an essay by Sandra Marek, examines the strange genius of Emily Bronte. Pauline Abraham offers the Re view's first translation from the Arabic a 10-line poem by Michael Naema, titled The Frozen River. Lillian Kucera contributes light hearted illustrations for Joan Gib bon's poem Love and The Simple Life, and Lucille Cabo is creator of the wide-eyed train that illustrates Lynne Sheeran's poem, Number 64. Other writers represented are Lynda Rousseau, Claudette Ruffino, Sheila Kelly, Sister Mary Louise, Dorothy Matthei, Rosalie Jankowski, Rita Caprini, Shirley Parrilli, Pa tricia Flood, Mary Lou Elmslie, Mary Ann Herold, Margaret Ford, Maryann Burke, and Joan Maher. Illustrators include Ann Corty, Rita Mnichowicz, art editor, and Jean Johnson. Miss Marek is chair man of the editorial board, which includes Miss Herold, Miss Rous seau, and Miss Ruffino. Future Freshmen Take Examinations Freshmen hostesses have circled four Saturdays on their engagement calendars, marking the four days on which prospective freshmen will take Entrance examinations. The first Examination day was March 9. Results of the tests are used as a determining factor for acceptance and as guides for students in the selection of courses. Representatives Visit Four High Schools Seven students were recent guests at city high schools, describing Mundelein curriculum and activities to members of the senior classes. Janet Kennedy and Jo Ann Per- kovic visited St. Augustine high school. Maureen Cella and Marcella McCann were guests at Sacred Heart high school. Alyce Fiedler spoke at St. Domi nic high school and Delanne Burns and Rita Caprini visited Mundelein Cathedral. 0 r n UI P r Committee pledge 0 L n 11 U L points are business of Jean Chester, chairman, Lillian Churchill, and Diana Muller. 60 Are Eligible For Service Committee Sixty students have contributed 97 hours of service as members of the recently reorganized Service committee, headed by Jean Chester, senior. Required for membership are five hours of service. Panels Discuss Three Religious Motif Dramas English majors turned the spot light on drama in three panel dis cussions held in Integration class during the past weeks. Theresa Dziedzic served as chair man for a discussion of T. S. Eliot's Murder in the Cathedral, a modern blank-verse dramatization of the life and death of Thomas a Beckct, arch bishop of Canterbury. Maureen Cella, Toni Cassaretto Perille; Constance Ferraro, Patricia O'Donnell, Shirley Parrilli, and Gloria I'ieczynski considered the literary and dramatic qualities of the play, set in Canterbury Cathedral, in 1170. Maryvivian Cunnea was chair man of a group discussing Emmet Lavery's Second Spring, a drama tization of the conversion and death of John Henry Cardinal Newman. Chandra Camp, Sally Vacarro, and Dorothy Haley took part in the panel. Therese Indelli focused her group on the achievement of Eugene O'Neill, most famous American playwright, dealing with a religious theme in Days Without End. On her panel were Ann Horan, Ann Mancini, Florence Theisen, Mari lynn Ryan, and Margaret Coughlan. SL Enter Spring Cecilians Sing Play In Concert Student organists, pianists, viol inists, and vocalists will be stars at the March 26 assembly, when the Cecilians present their amial Spring concert. Mary Ann Stepps will sing Sem- pre Libera, from the opera La Tra- viata by Verdi, and Mary Ellen Burg will play Chopin's Impromp tu, Opus 36. Moonyeen Brown will give her impression of Laughing Waters, a scherzo for the organ, from Copper Country Sketches by Weaver. Patricia Coakley will sing the Mountain Brook by Kountz and Marilyn Zanke will sing of the Maids of Cadiz by Delibes. Piano selections will include Hu- moresque by Poulenc played by Sylvia Dominguez, Anamae Ke- hoe's rendition of Preamble from Carnaval, Opus 9. by Schumann, and Delius' Three Preludes, played by Joan Kies. Joan Doherty will sing O Men from the Fields, by Clayton, and Suzanne McBride will play a violin solo, Zigeunerweisen, Opus 20 by Sarasate. Diane Szaradowski will present a group of organ selections by Gor don Balch Nevin, Sketches from the City, including Urchin Whistling In the Street, Grandmother on the Porch, and The Busy Mills. Accompanists will be Mary Skla vounos, Elizabeth Casieri, Sally Ann Lipinski, and Pareannie Wil son. MUSICIANS Mary Anne Stepps, Mary El len Burg, and Anamae Kehoe re hearse for the Cecilian Spring con cert, March 26, at 1:10 p.m. uAcrapinad The news in the Lounge is var ied these days. For instance, it's a little known fact that Alice Bourke, Patricia Cullen, Joan Zander, Victoria Boniba, and Arlene Luberda rushed the season by touring the Lincoln Park zoo. Eleanor Ferraina learned how to hold golf sticks from a pro fessional, when she posed for pic tures illustrating golf lessons the Sun-Times and WTTW will give for the Chicago Boys club. Guests at the St. Patrick's Day dinner went away humming Lon donderry air, as played by organ ist Katherine Jackson, and Ballet from Petite Suite by DeBussey, a piano-organ duo with Carole Bau er and Moonyeen Brown perform ing. French students Patricia Flood, Carmelina Napolitano, Kathleen Kilday, Halina Doktor, Theodora Pierdos, Patricia Hayes, Mary Anne Bilski, Rosemary Esposito, and Mary E. Kelly attended a con cert of the Little Singers of Paris at the Eighth Street theatre. Also attending the performance through the courtesy of the French Consulate General were Jean En- glehardt, Theresa Pasquinelli, Barbara Hegan, Roselle Primeau, Geraldine Sofka, Joan Wright, and Alice Dowey. By the happy smile on her face, we know Mary Ann Manago en joyed her trip to Milwaukee. Ber nadette Hofer felt the same way about her invitation to the Mar quette Triangle Mardi Gras party. Genevieve Baldwin and Eliza beth Casieri talked about the I IT Junior class party. As we listened, Denise Hefferman, Kathryn Thom as, Mary Ann Rubey, Sally Ma lone, Elizabeth Weinrick, Mary- thomas Helgeson, and Barbara An netti discussed the Notre Dame Mardi Gras. Diane Scifres chimed in with details of the Northwestern Delta Sigma party. You would have thought Betsy Spight was a professional musician by her gestures in describing the Birdland Jazz concert. Geraldine Burke, Betty Ann Ellingsen, and Patricia Guadagno expressed the opinion that The Ten Command ments in cinema deserved applause. Nancy Hinchey, Dawn McKee, Faculty Members Attend Meetings, Qive Lectures Sister Mary Bernarda, B.V.M., Assistant to the President, and Sis ter Mary Donald, Dean of Studies, attended the Twelfth National Con ference on Higher Education, at the Congress hotel, March 5-8. Theme of the conference was Higher Education. A New Look at the Not-Too-Distant Future. It was sponsored by the Associ ation for Higher Education, a department of the National Edu cation association, which is cele brating its centennial. Sister Mary Pierre, chairman, and Sister Mary Renee, of the Home Economics department, will attend the March 21, 22 meeting of the Illinois Dietetic association at the Congress hotel. Mary Lambrecht Wheling, Kar lene Oeser, and Cecilia Lee Mei will serve as hostesses for the meeting. Sister Mary Richardine and Sis ter Mary Alexander, of the Educa tion department, will attend the first statewide conference of the Illinois Commission on Teacher Education and Professional Standards, March 30. An affiliate of the Illinois Educa tion association, it will meet at Illi nois State Normal university, at Normal. Sister Mary Therese, chairman of the Physics department, and Sis ter Mary Marguerite Christine, of the Chemistry department, attended a Workshop in Education at the College of St. Teresa, Winona, Minnesota, March 8 and 9. Sister Mary Marguerite Chris tine spoke on Physical Science in a General Education, and conducted a panel discussion on the relation ship of science and philosophy, stressing the different modes of knowing. Music Students Qive Off-Campus Program Two students presented a mus ical program for the Irving Park Catholic Woman's club, March 13, including a few Irish airs. Mary Sklavounos accompanied vocalist Marilyn Zanke. Betty Weiss, Carol Ann Byrne, and Judith Azzarello went to Loyola's Variety show. Anamae Kehoe and Barbara Goetsh attended the Al- vernia Alumnae Mardi Gras for mal. Mary Ann Kearney attended the University of Illinois St. Patrick's Day ball. Elizabeth Ciolino, Mary Lou Bartholomew, and Deborah Lein- enweber traveled to the Universi ty of Indiana for a weekend. And the atmosphere in the Lounge was filled with dreams of weddings as three girls surprised everyone with news of their en gagements, Margaret Printen to William Kaepplinger, Ann Horan to Thomas Boyle, and Patricia O'Brien to Robert Clark. Mary Lambrecht became Mrs. Donald W jling at a Nuptial Mass, March 2, at St. Hilary's Church. A I f ' Editor, 18114836, Inspires Research Of History Major Marilyn Schultz will present the second in a series of Senior History papers, March 26, at 2 p.m., in Room 402. Subject of her paper is Hezechiah Niles Weekly Regis ter : A Channel of Nationalism. Between 1811 and 1836. Niles edited in Baltimore one of the best historical records of the first half of the nineteenth century. Although objective in printing the news as it happened, he personally stressed the need of unifying Ameri can nationalism: a complete break from English influence, whether ec onomic or cultural. On April 2, Mary Shannon will present her paper entitled Catherine of Aragon and the Legatine Court at Blackfriars. It was legally impossible to annul the marriage of Henry VIII of England to Catherine, his first wife, hut still the English courts went through the formalities of doing so. Miss Shannon has concentrated her investigation on the proceedings leading up to and during the in famous trial. Class, Club Groups Mark Mardi Gras, Go On Field Trips Field trips to the Chicago Drapery company and to the Ben Rose deco rating studios were on the Home Decoration class agenda this month. Students saw the silk-screen process used on textiles at the Ben Rose workroom, and the current show at the Drapery company. Fiber construction attracted mem bers of the Textile Buying class to Sears Roebuck and company fac tories. * * * A Mardi Gras dinner party. Shrove Tuesday, prepared the Resi dent students for the social-lifeless weeks of Lent. St. Therese Hall hosted St. Philomena Hall. Freshmen Barbara McGarvey and Colleen O'Brien were general co- chairmen. Decorations chairman was Rosemarie Juppe. Nancy Scanlon headed the Enter tainment committee, and Diane Sarti was in charge of the Serving committee. Norma Indovina di rected rehabilitation. * * * Mary Ann Banich, NFCCS Sci ence committee representative, head ed a group attending the NFCCS general meeting at De Paul univer sity, March 10. With Miss Banich were Carol Ann Brust, Alicia Villarreal, Alice Bourke, Marilyn Hennessey, and Patricia Cullen.
title:
1957-03-18 (3)
publisher:
Women and Leadership Archives http://www.luc.edu/wla
creator:
Mundelein College
description:
Student newspaper for Mundelein College
subject:
Newspapers
subject:
Religious communities--Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary
subject:
Students
subject:
Universities and colleges
subject:
Women's education
relation:
Mundelein College Records
type:
Text
language:
English
rights:
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coverage:
Chicago, Illinois
coverage:
Mundelein College